Jack YETIV; TREIMee Corporation, Petitioners, v. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, Respondent.
No. 04-76044.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Nov. 15, 2006. Filed Sept. 20, 2007.
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Greg Addington, Assistant United States Attorney, Reno, NV, for the respondent.
Before: WILLIAM C. CANBY, JR., JOHN T. NOONAN, and RICHARD A. PAEZ, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge CANBY; Concurrence by Judge NOONAN.
CANBY, Circuit Judge:
Jack Yetiv and his wholly-owned TREIMee Corporation (collectively, “Yetiv“) petition for review of an administrative decision of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD“) imposing civil monetary penalties under
Background
The Park on Westview property (“the property“) is a 212-unit multi-family housing project in Houston, Texas. Yetiv purchased the property in 1997 with a HUD-insured loan. To secure HUD insurance, Yetiv was required to sign a regulatory agreement which imposed various duties related to the management and financial operations of the property, including the duty to submit annual financial statements. As a multi-family mortgagor, Yetiv was additionally subject to the Civil Money Penalty statute,
After Yetiv failed to file financial statements for the five fiscal years spanning 1997-2001, HUD issued an administrative complaint in July 2002 seeking civil penalties pursuant to the Civil Monetary Penalty statute. Five months later, prior to an adjudication on the merits, Yetiv prepaid the HUD-insured loan. Despite Yetiv‘s contention that his early payment deprived HUD of jurisdiction to maintain the enforcement action, the HUD ALJ issued a summary judgment order finding that TREIMee “knowingly and materially” violated the financial reporting requirement for the years 1997-2001. After a hearing to determine the amount of TREIMee‘s penalty and the extent of Yetiv‘s individual liability as an officer of TREIMee, the ALJ issued an Initial Decision ordering TREIMee to pay $50,000.00 for its violations and imposing a penalty of $20,000 against Yetiv and TREIMee jointly and severally.1 Yetiv subsequently appealed to the Secretary of HUD, who adopted the ALJ decision without change. Yetiv petitions for review and we have jurisdiction under
Standard of Review
We review de novo the scope of an agency‘s jurisdiction. Saratoga Sav. & Loan Ass‘n v. Fed. Home Loan Bank Bd., 879 F.2d 689, 691 (9th Cir.1989). HUD‘s decision to impose civil money penalties is reviewed pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“),
Discussion
As a threshold matter, Yetiv contends that HUD lacked jurisdiction to impose civil money penalties because he prepaid the HUD-insured loan prior to the
Under
At oral argument, Yetiv characterized himself as the victim of a vendetta: he had paid off his loan, neither HUD nor the public had lost any money, and it was simply asking too much to require annual audited statements and to persevere in that requirement after the loan had been paid off. Unquestionably there is considerable exasperation on the part of both parties reflected in the record. But surely HUD is entitled to require, by regulation and agreement, that the borrowers it insures regularly document the financial health of their HUD-insured projects.2 And Congress has authorized HUD to exact monetary penalties for the failure to file such reports. See
We also are not persuaded by Yetiv‘s primary procedural argument. He contends that HUD‘s decision to impose penalties was arbitrary and capricious because the ALJ used an illogical standard for determining whether the violations were “material.” Under the controlling regulations, a material violation is one that is significant in some respect or to some degree.
Yetiv argues, and we tend to agree, that some of these factors (notably, the
Nor are we persuaded by Yetiv‘s challenges to the sufficiency of evidence. In support of his finding that Yetiv‘s violations were committed “knowingly,” the ALJ relied on admissions by Yetiv, an attorney, that he was informed of the financial reporting requirement prior to entering into the regulatory agreement. These admissions constitute substantial evidence of a knowing violation even if, as Yetiv claims, his private mortgage broker advised him that the financial reporting requirement was not routinely enforced. See
In support of his conclusion that Yetiv‘s violations were material, and to determine the amount of the penalty, the ALJ found that Yetiv benefited by failing to provide the required audited statements for the five years in question in an amount at least equal to the cost of compliance. At the penalty phase, the ALJ additionally relied upon a survey showing that, for the fiscal years 2001 and 2002, the annual financial audit costs of fourteen comparable Houston-area, multi-family projects ranged from $6,000 to $24,631, and averaged $9,118. Because, as the ALJ noted, the audit costs reflected in the government‘s survey included both the cost of audited financial statements and the cost of preparation of tax returns, it was not possible to determine with precision what portion of the total costs were attributable to the cost of audited financial statements. Despite this deficiency in the record, the ALJ was entitled to infer from the survey that a substantial portion of the $9,118 average was incurred for the preparation of an audited financial statement. We conclude, therefore, that sufficient evidence exists to support both the determination of materiality, see Order on Secretarial Review, Matter of Associate Trust Financial Servs. (Associate Trust III), HUDALJ 96-008-CMP (Nov. 20, 1997) (evidence of even one factor may lead to a conclusion that a violation is material),3 and the amount of
We have carefully reviewed the many other arguments presented by Yetiv, individually and for his corporation, and find them to be without merit. Accordingly, the ALJ‘s order imposing civil money penalties is
PETITION FOR REVIEW DENIED.
NOONAN, Circuit Judge, concurring:
At oral argument, Yetiv, a lawyer representing himself, made a spirited case that he was the object of bureaucratic spite. Reading the record has not entirely dispelled that impression. Yetiv says he was doing what others did; the government had no loss; he was picked on out of pique. Nonetheless, Yetiv‘s legal arguments do not carry the day. Analogously, a claim of “selective prosecution” of a crime is rarely a winner. Oyler v. Boles, 368 U.S. 448, 456 (1962) (“the conscious exercise of some selectivity in enforcement is not in itself a federal constitutional violation.“) HUD, when I first became acquainted with it in redevelopment work fifty years ago, was a lumbering agency, slow to act and not very vigilant in the performance of its duties. It does not seem to have changed. Yet an annual report on the financial health of projects financed by the federal government is not an unreasonable requirement. Failure to file is a material harm to the agency providing the money. However casually and unexpectedly HUD decides to make an example of a developer, it acts within its jurisdiction and is not arbitrary in asserting the need of annual reports as a material aid to its activities.
